Seattle-based Bittrex ceased operations in the United States on April 30, and it said the bankruptcy filing would not impact Bittrex Global, which serves customers outside the United States. The company's non-U.S. operations are based in Liechtenstein. Bittrex's assets and liabilities were both between $500 million and $1 billion, according to a bankruptcy petition filed in Wilmington, Delaware court.
Bittrex said that it was still holding crypto assets of U.S. customers who did not withdraw funds before April 30.
Those assets are "safe and secure" and Bittrex said it intended to ask the bankruptcy court for a limited re-opening of customer accounts so that the crypto could be distributed back to customers.
Several companies in the crypto industry have tumbled into bankruptcy over the past year, felled by a drop in asset prices, renewed regulatory scrutiny, and in the case of the once-prominent exchange FTX, criminal charges.
The SEC sued Bittrex on April 17, alleging that former CEO William Shihara encouraged crypto asset issuers seeking to make their tokens available on the company's platform to delete public statements that could lead regulators to investigate those token offerings as securities.
Bittrex has denied the SEC's allegations, saying the crypto assets on its platform were not securities or investment contracts. While the SEC's lawsuit remains pending, Bittrex had previously agreed to pay $29 million in fines to the U.S. Treasury Department for "apparent violations" of sanctions on certain countries and anti-money laundering law.
Bittrex's petition listed the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Asset Control as the company largest unsecured creditor, with more than $24 million owed to the agency.
Bittrex's other largest creditors were mostly customers
of the crypto exchange. Bittrex listed 16 customers with at
least $1 million in their accounts, without identifying them by
name. Bittrex's largest remaining customer account has $14.6
million in assets, according to the petition.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth; Editing by Mark Porter and Jamie
Freed)